Kia Looks to Set the Streets Alight With Radical provo
Concept at Geneva

GENEVA – Marc 4, 2013: Looking every centimetre a road-legal
racer, Kia’s new provo concept, unveiled at the 83rd Salon
International De l’Auto in Geneva, mixes ultra-modern technology with
a self-confident and agile look to deliver an exciting new B-segment car
for enthusiasts.

This is a car designed for fun – pure and simple. Every curve,
crease and line combines to bring provo to life with a single purpose
– to delight and entrance its owner and to bring a smile to the
driver's face. The car is meant to be cheeky and cheerful in its
compactness and to hint at the fun awaiting on the open road.

Created to deliver a new interpretation of the DNA from sporting coupes
of the past with all the advantages of up-to-the-minute technology and
materials, provo blends a clean, simple yet muscular exterior with a
stunning interior treatment mixing high-tech and luxury materials that will
set pulses racing whether on busy city streets or at the race-track.

From its steep leading edge featuring an aero-style splitter,
carbon-fibre panels and tiny LED cluster front lights, over the long bonnet
and sculpted flanks, visor-look windscreen to the sharply cut-off rear
treatment (also featuring an aerodynamic splitter with an adjustable vent
system to direct airflow), the provo looks every inch a purposeful
performer.

Described by Gregory Guillaume, Chief Designer at Kia’s European
styling base in Frankfurt, as “an emotional and muscular car aimed at
delivering pure fun and performance for today’s city-based enthusiast
driver who longs for the curves of the open road,” the Kia provo
isn’t just a styling exercise.

It combines a 1.6-litre Turbo GDI engine producing 150kW with
smart-4WD-hybrid technology from an electric motor delivering an additional
power surge to the rear wheels when required and also allowing low-speed
electric-only motion. A seven-speed DCT transmission – Kia’s
first – completes the impressive technical package.

Guillaume went on: “This is entirely a car for European tastes and
conditions. Designed purely at our Frankfurt studios theprovo was conceived
as a confident and single-minded statement of dynamism and energy to
deliver a new sense of fun into the B-segment.

“The potent shaping displays a balanced and refined outline within
a compact overall shape and the tiny front and rear overhangs enhance the
balance within its proportions.”

Clearly a car from Kia, the compact provo which is 3.88-metres long,
1.77-metres wide and 1.35-metres tall, introduces itself with a steep front
nose and carbon fibre lower valance that immediately convey a sense of
purpose.

Hidden behind a single piece of glass is the latest take on the
Kia’s ‘tiger nose’ grille treatment linking straight into
the Schreyer-inspired headlamp units that are made up of more than 850 tiny
LEDs. The programmable LEDs can be used to provide daytime running lights,
full beam or even race-style configurations – as well as more
humorous and decorative displays to add to provo’s sense of fun!

This thin, sharp glass panel is echoed at the rear of provo’s body
and separates a purposeful splitter-style lower valance from the long, flat
bonnet panel sculpted with twin creases to hint at but not slavishly copy
the muscle cars of old.

A wrap-around front screen hides the A pillars and frameless doors,
giving a visor-style appearance to the cabin glass with the clamshell-like
roof floating above. This is divided at the rear by different colour
sections rising up from the C-Pillars in an almost roll-over bar
appearance.

Colour is used on the provo to enhance the almost-masculine stance with
sharp points echoed throughout the design. High-intensity blood-orange
accents contrast with the grey-green ‘Storm Metal’ body colour
to draw the eye to particular aspects of the structure and equipment, while
carbon fibre surfaces interplay with traditional materials and high-gloss
or anodised aluminium to strengthen the connection to the track cars that
inspired provo.

Planting provo firmly in touch with the road are distinctive 225/40
19-inch milled-alloy wheels with a traditional ‘cast’ look
fixed by single centre nuts finished in anodised blood-orange. And with
just a 2.53-metre wheelbase, exciting handling and road-holding is
guaranteed.

Backing up those performance credentials, provo utilises an ingenious
Smart 4WD Hybrid power train. The four cylinder turbocharged 1.6-litre GDI
(gasoline direct injection) engine is tuned to deliver is 150kW rapidly and
progressively allowingprovo to deliver an injection of speed and
performance often absent from the more functional B-segment mainstream.

But, this potent internal combustion engine also benefits from a
regenerative-powered electric motor driving the rear wheels either
automatically when required during cornering and in strong acceleration
– giving a power boost of as much as 33kW – or in a
button-activated creep-mode at low speeds to avoid emissions in city
traffic or when ‘stealth’ is required. The regenerative system
captures its power during braking when in normal use.

Moving inside, the Kia Europe Design team was able to let imaginations
run free although in typical Kia fashion it delivers clear functionality
with exuberant style – essential if provo is to go into production at
some point in the future.

Guillaume commented: “The interior is very, very black – as
we believe it should be to allow drivers to focus on the experience. But we
have also looked to make the functional aspects of the car fit the modern
demands of today’s motorists.”

Opening the two side doors – via flush-fitting push-up electronic
handles that operate with a satisfying electric click – reveals that
the polished aluminium panels featured in the external sculpted flanks
extend to create a relatively high-level two-step sill into the car –
cut-away at the leading edge to allow easier ingress and exit.

The next surprise is the door construction itself – the doors are
made from three individual panels – the outer panel, a carbon-fibre
inner panel and a neoprene-covered inner section that also features the
Storm Metal body colour. The inner door releases are reassuringly solid
polished aluminium.

The dashboard is made from a single expanse of carbon fibre, but does
not extend down to the floor – deliberately – in order to keep
the footwells clear and uncluttered except for polished aluminium footrests
and pedals.

Echoing the sculpted flanks of the provo, the dashboard has a
business-like main binnacle containing large analogue dials on a digital
display and a smaller central display of other minor gauges, but because
the display is digital it can be programmed to offer a selection of
functions.

Set on the centre tunnel are two control hubs – the engine
stop-start button and drive selector for the seven-speed DCT transmission
and a Multi-Media Interface control.

This latter control allows the driver to select a variety of screen
displays – as well as controlling infotainment functions.

In ‘normal’ mode the driver sees a speedometer, rev counter
and sat-nav route instructions. In ‘cruise’ the display is
centred on a large scale map, route instructions and a speedometer, while
in ‘track’ mode the display features just a large rev counter,
a track-map and a lap-timer.

There is also a full ‘entertainment’ mode allowing visuals
of music, radio and other information.

The centre-mounted display provides appropriate gauges to the mode with
a series of aluminium toggle switches set underneath – including an
anodised blood-orange toggle for the hazard warning lights.

Modern materials allow the front seat construction to be made from a
single wave-like panel running from one door sill to the other –
covered in quilted leather. The seat backrests are cleverly mounted on a
rotating aluminium track so that instead of folding forward, they spin into
the centre of the vehicle allowing easy access to the admittedly
occasional-use rear seats.

Guillaume commented: “The whole interior concept was designed
around not having a big centre console, but instead using latest technology
to provide excellent functionality in a clean, clear and attractive
manner.

“By using a DCT gearbox we were able to get rid of the
floor-mounted gear-shift and use paddles behind the steering wheel, which
has blood-orange stitching and a race style straight-ahead indicator,
allowing us to use the floor space for other controls resulting in a much
tidier environment. And because the seats are fixed we have full electric
adjustment for the pedal box and steering column – further
simplifying the interior and giving a perfect-fit for any
driver.”

Completing the moody cockpit feel are tiny red LEDs set in the
multi-layered doors, in the air vents and also in roof to give a low-glow
ambient illumination. The roof panel also incorporates aluminium window
toggle controls.

Whilst no specific production schedule for provo is on the calendar, the
arrival later this summer of the new Kia pro_cee’d GT makes it clear
that the company remains committed to delivering desirable, dynamic and
stunningly attractive vehicles that will deliver affordable enjoyment to
real, everyday motorists. The provo could be just such a car.

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